Taming the American West

Theme 2

Landscapes in the arid West challenged newcomers'
assumptions about an endless, bountiful frontier.

Westward expansion created encounters with arid lands and breathtaking landscapes.
More and more Americans recognized that their country's natural resources were not
infinite, sparking an emerging environmental consciousness. The federal government
became directly involved in the preservation of land and protecting the endangered
bison. In 1871, Congress established Yellowstone as the world's first national park,
to be forever "dedicated and set apart as a public park or pleasuring ground for the
benefit and enjoyment of the people."

At the same time, scientists and government officials hoped that "rain will follow the
plow" into the arid West; farmers eagerly headed west in hopes of making the desert
bloom. But it soon became apparent that traditional agricultural methods could not
succeed on arid lands, and tens of thousands of homesteaders suffered drought,
low crop prices, hardship, and homelessness. By the 1880s and 1890s, farmers and
ranchers drawn west by the Homestead Act and other incentives needed government
assistance due to harsher conditions than expected.

Federal officials believed in providing indirect government assistance that created
opportunities for success. Instead of subsidizing the railroad companies, farmers and
ranchers wanted the government to provide direct assistance in the form of low-interest
loans and regulation or take over of railroad and telegraph lines. Without government
assistance, corporations took over farming, ranching, and mining because they had the
capital needed to manage the new lands and resources.